Seeking peace
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SOUL FOOD
About a week ago, I talked to a woman named Karen McCarthy Casey,
who helped the Huntington Beach Church of Religious Science design a
program for an international campaign called A Season of Nonviolence.
She has a keen interest in fostering peace and nonviolence through
clear, honest and articulate communications.
Casey believes that having compassion for one another is essential
to all of us living in peace. And she believes that communication,
when successful, is a path to compassion.
She mentioned a T-shirt slogan she has a special fondness for. It
reads, “You cannot hate someone whose story you know.” For Casey, the
sentiment attests to the role communication plays in compassion.
Not long after talking with Casey, I came across a story written
last year by author Aimee Liu just days after the first anniversary
of Sept. 11, 2001. Liu tells of coming home to find foot-long flags
on 2-foot spikes left by a local Realtor on her lawn. Attached to
each flag was a tag bearing the name of the Realtor and a note,
“Proudly wave your flag on these days.” A list of holidays followed.
The complimentary flag accompanied by this note made Liu, in her
words, irate. It was, she wrote, a clear “case of massive involuntary
flag-waving. Imposed flag- waving. Worse, commercial flag-waving.
Mandatory flag-waving.” It was a warning to “hoist the Stars and
Stripes -- or else.”
Never mind that Liu simply plucked the flag from the pot it was
left in, removed the notice and placed it in another spot, unseen
from the street. She wasn’t arrested or forced to return the flag to
its geranium pot at gunpoint. But Lui went to her keyboard and used
her irritation as a wrapper for a rant about Section 215 of the
Patriot Act. The whole story struck me as hyperbole, an unnecessary
and misleading whine.
Maybe I could introduce Liu to Casey. I know a priest, a
missionary for a long time in Zimbabwe, a scientist and a theologian.
Father Roy Bowler once remarked in response to another man’s
persistent whining, “It is a great big irking world out there.”
Life can be vexing and it’s full of injustice. None of us are
going to make it better by adding our peevishness to the big irking
pot then stirring it. Tranquillity in our lives and peace in the
world starts with us. It’s a choice.
Jesus said, “Whatever you want men to do to you, do also unto
them.”
Everyone knows the Golden Rule. Still, the things that Mohandas K.
Gandhi called the seven social sins -- politics without principles,
wealth without work, commerce without morality, education without
character, pleasure without conscience, science without humanity and
worship without sacrifice -- remain commonplace.
Gandhi said, “We must be the change we wish to see.”
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